2 cents worth from a sidecar crosser, as we almost all use road bike based engines we have to compromise with gearing.
However as we have/build very torquey engines, twins seem better the fours, we can run very wide ratio boxes.
Now back to Euros verses Japs and how the g/boxes spin at different ratios, that's so the gears will change better- ever noticed how on a Euro bike the gears are wider and quite hard to shift at times where as the Japs are usually very nifty to up shift and save time that way. Primary shaft speed.
On a Euro bike you seem to have to shift first then gas on, a very comfortable way to ride but if you try to push it the shifting goes to hell and you seem to lose more time.
Back to the chairs. On the Yamaha 650 based engines they spent alot of time building a bigger bore and stroke, all the way to and past 1000cc. The g/box is way strong enough to take the added hp/torque but then we have trouble with shifting, particularly under load. The answer to this is to buy and fit a special primary gear to speed up the rotation of the gear cluster thus making shifting much easier.
Proof of this was at Conondale where the Wasp from SA was far quicker out the gat than us and in the first race on Fri we must have missed 25 shifts trying to catch him. The harder Popeye tried the more shifts he missed, but on Sat he was more relaxed and we took a second a lap off him.
He also has about 30 more HP than us as we had ours dynoed by Raceline 2 weeks before the Nats and came home with 57 where his builder quotes 84 not 95 as Wally boasts!!